Central

Kyoto Railway Museum

Highlight
A nostalgic line up of steam locos, electric trains and shinkansens

53 trains to see - from steam locomotives to shinkansens!

Opened in April 2016 as a museum dedicated to the trains of Japan, the Kyoto Railway Museum is a new incarnation of the Umekoji Steam Locomotive Museum. And, as before, the highlights are the 53 trains and carriages preserved and displayed in the main building and the fan-shaped (roundhouse) steam locomotive shed. These varied trains underpinned Japan’s industries and transportation across the years.
The museum boasts Japan’s iconic D51 steam loco, the D52 steam loco that could pull the biggest amount of freight and the 1800 steam loco imported from the UK for incline work as well as other modern trains like the 500 series shinkansen that achieved a speed of 300km/h, a world record at the time. All of these can be seen at close quarters.
The museum also is well equipped with operational systems, such as rides on a carriage pulled by a steam loco and driving simulator, so everyone ? from train fans to families - can have fun trying out railway life.

photoRepresentative trains of JR West

Representative trains of JR West

photoEntrance

Entrance

photoRoundhouse Platform

Roundhouse Platform

Question

Did Japan’s railroad business start in the Meiji period or Taisho period?

Address Kankijicho, Shimogyo-ku
TEL 0570-080-462
FAX None
URL https://www.kyotorailwaymuseum.jp/
Hours 10:00~17:00(entry by 16:30)
Closed Wed, New Year Hols and other hols
Adm Adults ¥1,500, High school and college students ¥1,300, Elementary and junior high school students ¥500, Age 3 and over ¥200, Steam train ride charged separately
Access A 2-min walk from JR Umekoji Kyoto-nishi Stn/Very close to Umekoji Koen/Kyoto Tetsudo Hakubutsukanmae Stop of City Bus/A 3-min walk from Umekoji Koen-mae Stop of City Bus

Facilities near by

photo:The Bank of Yanagihara Memorial Museum

The Bank of Yanagihara Memorial Museum

One of the oldest wooden bank buildings in Kyoto founded by a discriminated-against people

photo:Kitamura Museum

Kitamura Museum

Tea aesthetics that fulfilled the dreams of a prominent tea master

photo:Neesima’s Residence

Neesima’s Residence

The home lived in by the founders of Doshisha University

photo:Kyoto Aquarium

Kyoto Aquarium

Life Connected by Water

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